In re Taylerson

142 F.2d 72, 31 C.C.P.A. 1025, 61 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 352, 1944 CCPA LEXIS 51
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 1944
DocketNo. 4875
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 142 F.2d 72 (In re Taylerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Taylerson, 142 F.2d 72, 31 C.C.P.A. 1025, 61 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 352, 1944 CCPA LEXIS 51 (ccpa 1944).

Opinion

BlaNd, Judge,

delivered tbe opinion of the court:

Appellant’s application for a patent relating to a “Chromium-Plated Conductor Boll” was filed in the United States Patent Office on April 28, 1939. It contained three claims, which were rejected by the Primary Examiner upon certain references, whereupon appellant canceled the claims and substituted therefor the appealed claims 4 and 5. These claims were rej ected upon the following prior art references:

Levy et ah, 1,952,762, March 27,1934.
Greer et al., 2,035,312, March 24,1936.
Wynne-Williams (Br.), 469,681, July 30,1937.
Brown, 2,203,253, June 4,1940.

[1026]*1026Appellant sought to amend his original specification and the claims at different times during the prosecution of the application, covering the period up until the last decision of the Board of Appeals in January of 1943. New claims were sought to be added before the board, and also a substitute specification and additional drawings were submitted. These were properly disallowed on the grounds of new matter and untimeliness. Appellant filed with the board a lengthy petition for reconsideration and submitted therewith two lengthy affidavits directed principally to the meaning of the term ‘''conductor roll,” which affidavits were not received or considered by the board. From the decision of the board affirming the examiner’s rejection, appellant has appealed to this court.

The appealed claims read as follows:

4. In apparatus for electrodepositing a metal on a strip of dissimilar metal, a conductor roll for contacting and supplying electric current to said strip as it moves through said apparatus; said conductor roll comprising a closed hollow metallic tubular member possessing good electrical conductivity, a hard metallic protective coating on the outer surface of said closed hollow metallic tubular member, said coating being resistant to chemical attack by the solution used in the electroplating process.
5. In apparatus for electrodepositing a metal on a strip of dissimilar metal, a conductor roll for contacting and supplying electric current to said strip as it moves through said apparatus; said conductor roll comprising a closed hollow metallic tubular member possessing good electrical conductivity, a hard metallic protective coating on the outer surface of said closed hollow metallic tubular member, said coating being resistant to chemical attack by the solution used in the electroplating process and means for circulating a cooling medium within said closed metallic tubular member whereby overheating is eliminated.

The alleged invention is accurately described by the examiner in his statement, as follows: ‘

The specification and claims relate to a conductor roll. This conductor roll is for the purpose of conducting a continuous length of metal sheet or strip and for conveying electric current by contact to said sheet or strip. The conductor roll is provided at its ends with sliding electrical contacts which are in turn connected to a suitable source of electricity. The electric current is thus conveyed from its source through the conductor roll to the sheet or strip passing over and in contact with said roll. The conductor roll is provided on its cylindrical surface with a protective coating of hard metal, such as chromium. The roll is hollow and is also provided with means for conveying cooling water through the hollow interior to prevent the roll from getting overhea ted.

Claim 4 was rejected upon the patents to Levy et al., Brown, or Wynne-Williams; and claim 5, which calls for means for cooling the roll by circulation of water through the interior thereof, was rejected upon the three aforesaid references in view of the patent to Greer et al.

The Greer et al. patent discloses pairs of water-cooled hollow rolls in electrical contact with sheet material passed through an annealing furnace, one roll of each pair being connected to an electrical circuit. [1027]*1027In tbat patent, the strip of sheet material is heated by the resistance of the current passing therethrough.

The patent to Levy et al. discloses a roll having a cylindrical portion over which is applied a chromium or stainless steel facing. The roll is provided with means for supplying electric current to the cylindrical face thereof.

Brown also discloses a roll having a cylindrical portion covered with a chromium outer layer. He provides means for supplying electric current to the cylindrical surface.

The British patent to Wynne-Williams discloses in its specification a roll which is said to contain an inner member of good electrical conductivity, which is surrounded by a stainless steel shell closely fitted to the inner member. The patentee states that the cathode drum may be mounted on a rotatable shaft through which the current passes.

In three of the references the rolls are used in the electrochemical art where it is desirable to deposit metal upon other metal through the action of electricity with an electrolyte. The deposited metal in the processes of these three patents is peeled or stripped off from the roll to form a thin sheet of metal or foil.

The Greer et al. rolls are used in a strip, annealing furnace. All the other references disclose rolls with hard metallic outside coatings, used in the electrodeposition of metal. It will be observed, therefore, that the difference between the rolls disclosed in the cited prior art (regardless of what they are called) and the roll claimed by appellant rests chiefly in the use to which the respective rolls are put. Appellant’s-object is to place a permanent coating of tin or the like upon a hard metallic strip.

The Board of Appeals, in its first decision, agreed with the examiner that the devices of each of the references were suitable for electroplating metallic strips already formed, and that the claims called for nothing inventive over the prior art. It properly approved the holding of the examiner that the amendments offered constituted new matter and said:

Whatever other designation the roll of the reference to Brown may have, it seems obvious that it is a conductor roll and that it could be used to direct a strip of metal over the same and the strip would, in effect, become a part of the roll at the point of contact and receive metal thereon the same as is deposited on the surface of the roll. So far as any efficacy to applicant’s disclosure by reason of the amendment to page 1, line 8 of the specification, is concerned, the claims cannot depend on that amendment for support because it is matter not originally disclosed. As originally stated, the disclosure was said to relate to a conductor roll for establishing metallic strip material as an electrode and nothing seems to have been said about this strip being directed onto and passing from the roll. Appellant has proposed to amend the appealed claims by adding certain limitations as to the strip being directed onto the conductor roll and passing from the roll but the insertion of such an amendment is not recommended. It [1028]*1028would apparently amount to a further limitation of matter already incorporated in the specification which was not originally presented.

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142 F.2d 72, 31 C.C.P.A. 1025, 61 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 352, 1944 CCPA LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-taylerson-ccpa-1944.